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Cambodia upholds opposition MP defamation case

BBC Published Jun 2, 2010 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Mu Sochua was fined $4,000 (£2,725) for defamation and refused to pay it, stating she is willing to go to jail.
4000 USD · fine2725 GBP · fine
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Citation-ready fact
Cambodia's national assembly voted to lift Mu Sochua's parliamentary immunity to allow the prime minister's defamation case to proceed.
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Cambodia's international donors met government officials to discuss aid pledges for the coming year at the time of the ruling.
1 year · aid pledges
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Cambodia's highest court has upheld a ruling that a leading opposition figure defamed the prime minister.

Prime Minister Hun Sen had sued Mu Sochua for defamation after she accused him of making derogatory remarks about her.

The former women's minister has refused to pay the $4,000 (£2,725) fine and says she is willing to go to jail.

Mu Sochua, the current MP for Kampot, called the ruling "a travesty of justice".

She had no defence counsel in court as her lawyer quit the case and joined the governing party after Cambodia's bar council accused him of malpractice.

The courts dismissed her complaint and the national assembly voted to lift her parliamentary immunity from prosecution so the prime minister's case could go ahead.

The ruling came as Cambodia's international donors met government officials to discuss their aid pledges for the coming year.

Local human rights groups have described freedom of expression in Cambodia as in a "perilous state".

A coalition of pressure groups has asked donors to link their payments to Cambodia's progress on human rights issues.

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